OPINION
This action under the Miller Act, 40 U.S.C. §§ 270a-270d, is brought by Kashulines, a subcontractor, against his contractor, Thermo, and his contractor’s surety, International, for $84,000 allegedly remaining unpaid from work done on Thermo’s federal contract. The work involved refurbishing a fire protection station on Ascension Island. 1 Thermo counterclaimed for $96,000, $20,000 representing damages from the same work at Ascension Island, the balance comprised of other claims from other contracts between the two. Kashulines nоw moves to strike the counterclaim.
Plaintiff advances two arguments. First, the Miller Act specially restricts venue to districts in which the work is “performed and executed,” 40 U.S.C. § 270b(b), and this venue restriction should not be destroyed by allowing counterclaims arising from work аt distant locations, he urges. But venue has never been a significant consideration for counterclaims. The federal venue statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1391, prescribes the places where a suit may be “brought,” and that statute has been strictly construed to apply only to the initiation of suit rather than to counterclaims.
See
6 Wright & Miller,
Federal Practice and Procedure
[hereinafter cited as “Wright & Miller”] §§ 1416, 1424 (1971). It is true that the venue provision in the Miller Act, while using the same phrasing as 28 U.S.C.
*198
§ 1391, may offer the plaintiff fewer choices than the latter statute.
2
Nevertheless, the venue provision in the Miller Act еxists for the protection of defendants,
Electronic & Missile Facilities, Inc. v. United States ex rel. Moseley,
Plaintiff’s second argument is that the counterclaims relating to contracts other than the contract which forms the basis of the plaintiff’s claim should not be entertained in a Miller Act case, and that to allow these counterclaims would exрand the jurisdiction of the federal courts. To analyze this assertion, the counterclaims must be separated into the compulsory and permissive categories defined by sections (a) and (b) of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 13, and the doсtrine of ancillary jurisdiction must be invoked. By the
“ill-defined concept of ‘ancillary jurisdiction’ ... a district court acquires jurisdiction of a case or controversy in its entirety, and, as an incident to the disposition of the matter properly beforе it, it may decide other matters raised by the case of which it could not take cognizance were they independently presented.” 13 Wright & Miller § 3523 (1975).
It is elementary that if a counterclaim is a compulsory response to a main claim properly invoking the jurisdiction of a federal court, the counterclaim is within the ancillary jurisdiction of the court.
E. g., Baker v. Gold Seal Liquors, Inc.,
A permissive counterclaim, on the other hand, is one that does
not
arise out of the same transaction or occurrence
*199
furnishing the subject matter of the plaintiff’s claim. Fed.R.Civ.P. 13(b); 6 Wright & Miller § 1420. Rule 13(b) by, its terms grants the defendant an unqualified right to interpose these unrelated claims, and the court possesses no discretion to reject them.
Montecatini Edison, S.P.A. v. Ziegler,
However, there is one important exception to the rule that permissive counterclaims require indepеndent jurisdictional bases: set-offs, claims to reduce the plaintiff’s claim rather than secure affirmative relief, are within the court’s ancillary jurisdiction for this limited purpose.
E. g., Heyward-Robinson, supra
at 1080-81 n.1 (dictum);
Newburger, Loeb & Co., Inc. v. Gross,
Applying this principle, defendant Thermo would be entitled to offset its permissive counterclaims, if proved, against any claims proved by the plaintiff; but its affirmative recovery would be limited to the amount, if any, of its compulsory counterclaims sustained, since only its compulsory counterclaims lie within the plenary jurisdiction of the court. Accepting this as thе result that would obtain in a non-Miller Act case, the sole remaining question is whether the fact that the plaintiff’s action arises under the Miller Act changes anything. The court concludes that it does not.
The essence of the plaintiff’s argument is that since the Miller Act is designed to protect subcontractors on federal construction projects, the federal rules of civil procedure should not operate to subject a Miller Act plaintiff to permissive counterclaims. It is suggested thаt the jurisdiction conferred by the Miller Act is limited, and that to apply Rule 13(b) in a Miller Act case would impermissibly expand the jurisdiction of the federal courts.
The contention that permissive counterclaims should not be entertained in certain cases was also advanced recently in
Montecatini Edison, S.P.A.
v.
Ziegler,
159 U.S. App.D.C. 19,
*200 “The objective of the Federal Rules with respect to counterclaims is to provide complete relief to the parties, to conserve judicial resources and to avoid the proliferation of lawsuits. [Citations omitted.] Thus, [plaintiff] assumes a great burden in attempting to persuade this court that the usual rule as to permissive counterclaims should nоt apply in a [‘special statutory’] proceeding.” Id. at 1282.
After reviewing the cases cited in support of the plaintiff’s argument, the court concluded:
“Appellee has failed to establish any general prohibition against permissive counterclaims in special statutory proceedings.” Id. at 1286.
So the first part of the plaintiff’s argument is unconvincing.
Turning to jurisdiction, plaintiff likewise bears a heavy burden in seeking to establish that jurisdiction over the permissive counterclaims should not exist to the limited extent of a set-off. Plaintiff has been unable to carry this burden. The rule that set-offs lie within the ancillary jurisdiction of the court is not restricted by the authorities which develop the rule, supra, to particular causes of action or grants of jurisdiction. Nor does thеre appear any reason in policy to so hold, since both the doctrine of ancillary jurisdiction in general, and the rationale for its extension to set-offs, would appear to apply equally to the range of civil actiоns comprehended by the rules. See generally 13 Wright & Miller § 3523; 3 Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 13.-19[1] (1974). It is especially noteworthy in this regard that Heyward-Robinson, supra at 1081 n. 1, approved the exception for set-offs in a Miller Act case without mention.
Finally, the case of
United States ex rel. Payne v. United Pacific Insurance Co.,
Accordingly, the plaintiff’s motion will be denied. Defendant Thermo may try all its counterclaims in this court, but its affirmative recovery will be limited to the amount of compulsory counterclaims, if any, sustained, as set forth earlier in this opinion.
Counsel for defendant Thermo shall submit an appropriate order.
Notes
. Some question may be raised whether this action falls under the Miller Act. 40 U.S.C. § 270b(b) provides:
“(b) Every suit instituted under this section shall be brought ... in the United States District Court for any district in which the contract was to be performed and executed and not elsewhere, irrespective of the amount in controversy . . ..”
Ascension Island is a British possession in the southern part of the Atlantic Ocean, and thus does not lie within any judicial district of the United States. In
United States ex rel. Bryant Electric Co. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.,
“The district courts shall have . . . jurisdiction ... of any action on a bond executed wider any law of the United States.”
The
Bryant Electric
court therefore did not reach the question of whether the geographical limitation in § 270b(b) is jurisdictional, and hence non-waivable, or pertaining to venue, and therefore waivable. However, subsequent law establishes that § 270b(b) is merely a venue requirement,
F. D. Rich Co. v. United States ex rel. Industrial Lumber Co.,
. 28 U.S.C. § 1391(b), (c) provides that in a non-diversity case, venue is proper not only in the district in which the clаim arose, but also in any district where all the defendants are doing business.
See United States ex rel. Capolino Sons, Inc. v. Electronic & Missile Facilities, Inc.,
. A counterclaim is not compulsory “if . . at the time the action was commenced the claim was the subject of another pending action. . .” Fed.R.Civ.P. 13(a); Baker v. Gold Seal Liquors, Inc., text supra. The plaintiff and the defendant Thermo are engaged in concurrent litigation in the state courts, but counsel for defendant Thermo represents in his brief that the parties have voluntarily dismissed from that suit the claims which are the subject matter of this case. Should the timing of that dismissal eventually become material in determining whether Thermo’s $20,000 counterclaim is in fact compulsory, the question can be confronted on that occasion.'
. Although the Supreme Court has not specifically held that permissive counterclаims require independent jurisdictional bases, that is the uniform view of the lower federal courts that have considered the matter, as the discussion in Wright & Miller indicates. But see Heyward-Robinson, text supra at 1088-89 (Friendly, J., concurring).
. 35 U.S.C. § 146. That section allows any party to a proceeding before the Board of Patent Interferеnces, if dissatisfied with the Board’s award, to bring a civil action to obtain an adjudication of its rights to a patent.
. Since the recognition of the exception that a set-off requires no independent jurisdictional grounds has occurred relatively recently in the law,
see Heyward-Robinson,
text
supra
at 1088 (Friendly, J., concurring), an occasional older case suggesting that permissive counterclaims cannot be entertained in Miller Act cases must be overlooked.
E. g., United States ex rel. Baltimore Brick Co. v. John A. Johnson & Sons, Inc.,
